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How California is Implementing
the Federal Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act
2012
Resources for Individuals with Pre-existing Conditions
California Health Care Reform
The Affordable Care Act: Resources for Individuals with Pre-existing Conditions Q&A
: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
Q: What is the federal health care reform law?
A: The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
creates more affordable health coverage options and
puts in place strong protections to make sure health
plans and insurance companies provide
comprehensive health coverage to you and your
family. The law requires plans and insurers to cover
you and your family. It also requires everyone to have
health coverage starting in 2014. Some changes have
already begun, and most changes will take place by
2014.
Q: Will I have to give up my current coverage?
A: No. When your coverage is renewed, it might
contain new benefits required under federal law, but
if your plan was already in effect on March 23, 2010,
you can keep your current coverage, as long as your
health plan and/or employer continues to offer it.
Plans that were in effect prior to March 23, 2010 are
called “grandfathered” plans. Your health plan must
explain in its written materials if it is a
“grandfathered” plan.
Q: Why does the law require everyone to have
health insurance coverage?
A: When people do not have health coverage,
everyone pays. Hospitals are required to treat people
who need emergency medical care, whether or not
they have health coverage. When doctor and hospital
bills go unpaid, these costs are passed on in increased
insurance premiums for those who have coverage or
to government programs funded by tax dollars. Right
now, this “uncompensated care” is estimated at more
than $50 billion per year in the U.S.
Q: Will I lose my current primary care provider
because of the Affordable Care Act?
A: No. You will be able to remain with your current
provider as long as s/he participates in your health
care plan.
Q: What is cost-sharing?
A: Cost-sharing refers to the costs you pay “out of
pocket” for medical services covered by your plan.
This generally includes deductibles, co-insurance and
co-payments or similar charges. It does not include
extra costs for using non-emergency providers not in
your plan.
Q: What is the Health Benefit Exchange?
A: The Health Benefit Exchange will help individuals
and small groups research and buy more affordable
health coverage. Starting in 2014, individuals and
small businesses will be able to compare health plans,
get answers to questions, find out if they are eligible
for tax credits, and enroll in a health plan that meets
their needs. To purchase coverage in the Exchange,
you must live in California and be a U.S. citizen or
national or be lawfully present in the U.S. For more
information about the California Health Benefit
Exchange, go to www.HealthExchange.ca.gov.
Q: Does the Affordable Care Act change how I get
emergency care?
A: No. The new federal law, like current California
law, requires that emergency services be covered
without prior authorization from your health plan.
You can go to the nearest hospital that provides
emergency care, whether or not it is in your health
plan’s network.
Q: Will I have to pay a co-pay for preventive
services?
A: Health plans cannot charge you for certain
preventive services. Those services can be found at:
www.healthcare.gov/law/provisions/preventive/inde
x.html. Co-pays may be required if preventive services
are received from an out-of-network provider or for
non-preventive services that are provided during the
same visit as preventive ones. If you think you have
been wrongly charged for preventive services, first,
contact your health plan to file a complaint. You can
: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
do this over the phone, in writing or online. If your
health problem is urgent, or if you already filed a
complaint and are not satisfied with your health
plan’s response, contact the Consumer Assistance
Program at
1-888-466-2219 or www.DMHC.ca.gov to get help
with your complaint.
Q: I thought health care reform was going to lower
premiums, but my premium recently increased. Is
that legal?
A: Yes, health plans can raise their premium rates.
But, the law requires your health plan or insurer to
justify premium increases to state and/or federal
regulators. The DMHC publicly posts rates filed by
plans at wpso.dmhc.ca.gov/RateReview/. Rate
increases of 10 percent or more will also be reported
on the federal website at www.healthcare.gov. These
sites will provide you with more information about
factors contributing to premium increases and help
you compare pricing.
Q: What is the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance
Plan?
A: The Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan (PCIP)
provides health coverage for people who have a pre-
existing medical condition and have been uninsured
for at least six months. You must also be a U.S. citizen
or be lawfully present in the U.S. to be eligible to
enroll. The PCIP is one of the first major expansions of
health care coverage for people who are uninsured.
For more information about enrolling in PCIP, go to
www.PCIP.ca.gov.
Q: Who is eligible to participate in the PCIP?
A: There are three criteria that must be met:
You must be a U.S. citizen, U.S. national or
lawfully present in the United States.
You must have been uninsured for at least six
months.
You must have a pre-existing condition.
Q: How do I enroll in PCIP?
A: To apply for PCIP, you must submit all of the
following:
A completed and signed application form;
A copy of documentation of citizenship or legal
presence in the United States; and
Evidence that you were denied coverage due to
your preexisting conditions or evidence of your
pre-existing condition
For more information and to download an
application, visit www.PCIP.ca.gov.
Q: What if I have not been without coverage for six
months or if I am not eligible for PCIP?
A: There is a second plan in California, the Major Risk
Medical Insurance Program (MRMIP) that you may
qualify for. You can find out more information at
www.PCIP.ca.gov or by calling 1-800-289-6574.
Q: Can health plans still limit or exclude coverage for
pre-existing conditions?
In California, group health plans can limit or exclude
coverage for pre-existing conditions for adults (age 19
and older) for up to six months from the date
coverage begins.
If you are an adult enrolling in individual coverage,
your plan can still exclude or limit coverage for a pre-
existing condition for up to 12 months if your plan
contract covers one or two people. If your plan
contract covers a family of three or more, the limit
can apply to you for only six months from the date
your coverage begins.
If you are trying to enroll your adult child (19-25) as a
dependent under your individual coverage, the health
plan may deny enrollment to adult children based on
pre-existing conditions or health history.
Special rules apply to pre-existing condition
exclusions for children under the age of 19, explained
below.
: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
Q: What if my child has a pre-existing condition
exclusion under his/her current coverage?
A: If your child (under the age of 19) is enrolled in a
group health coverage plan, the health plan cannot
exclude coverage for a child’s pre-existing condition.
If your child was enrolled in an individual health
coverage plan before Sept. 23, 2010, any pre-existing
condition exclusion should have already expired.
If you purchased a new individual health coverage
plan for your child on or after Sept. 23, 2010, the
health plan cannot apply any pre-existing condition
limitation to your child.
Q: Does a health plan have to enroll my child in
individual coverage if we apply at any time of the
year?
A: Yes, your child can apply for individual coverage at
any time. Beginning Sept. 23, 2010, no child under
age 19 can be denied coverage because of a pre-
existing condition. Health plans must offer individual
coverage to children under the age of 19 year-round.
While your child can apply for coverage at any time,
the premium rates may be lower if you apply during
“open enrollment.” A child’s open enrollment period
occurs every year during his or her birth month.
California law does not limit the premiums that
health plans charge to a child if he or she applies for
coverage outside of open or special enrollment
periods.
If you enrolled in individual coverage and you are
trying to add your adult child (age 19-25) as a
dependent, the health plan can deny coverage to
your adult child based on his or her pre-existing
condition or health history. The health plan could also
choose to enroll your adult child, but with a pre-
existing condition exclusion (for up to 6-12 months).
Q: How much do I have to pay for preventive care?
A: Health plans cannot charge you for certain
preventive services received within the plan’s
provider network. Those services can be found at:
www.HealthCare.gov/prevention/index.html.
Q: What if I am charged for a preventive care item or
service that I think should be free?
A: First, contact your health plan to file a complaint.
You can do this over the phone, in writing or online. If
your health problem is urgent, or if you already filed a
complaint and are not satisfied with your health
plan’s response, contact the Consumer Assistance
Program at 1-888-466-2219 or
www.HealthHelp.ca.gov to get help.
Q: Can I be charged for preventive services received
from out-of-network providers?
A: Yes. A health plan may charge you for preventive
services you receive from out-of-network providers.
Q: I am pregnant. Are prenatal and preventive
services covered?
A: The Affordable Care Act requires health plans to
cover certain preventive services for pregnant women
at no cost. To learn more about these free preventive
services, visit
www.HealthCare.gov/prevention/index.html.
Q: I am concerned about cancer. Does the Affordable
Care Act provide for cancer prevention?
A: Health plans must cover a variety of important
cancer prevention services at no cost. These include:
Breast cancer screening: Mammograms every 1
to 2 years for women over 40, referrals for
genetic counseling and chemo prevention
discussion for women at increased risk
Cervical cancer: Regular Pap smears and
coverage for HPV vaccine coverage
Colon cancer: Screening for adults over 50
Tobacco cessation
Q: I think I may be HIV positive.
A: Health plans must cover HIV screening tests at
no cost.
The Affordable Care Act: Curbing Insurance Rescissions and Cancellations FACT SHEET
: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provides you and your family with new protections,
programs and resources. The Act prohibits a health insurer from cancelling coverage for honest mistakes
on applications or medical history questionnaires.
Under California and federal law, a health plan cannot
rescind or cancel your coverage simply because you
made an honest mistake on your application or about
your health history.
A rescission means a health plan declares your health
plan contract or policy invalid from the day it began.
California health care consumers have been protected
from inappropriate rescissions for many years. The
federal law provides similar protections to all
Americans. The new law also limits the reasons for
which a health plan can cancel your coverage going
forward.
This provision applies to all health plans and types of
coverage, including employer-based group health
plans and individual health insurance coverage
purchased for you and your family.
Your health plan can rescind your health coverage if
you intentionally put false or incomplete information
in your application. If the health plan rescinds your
coverage, you may be required to pay back all of the
money the health plan spent on your medical care.
If your health plan determines that you intentionally
put false or incomplete information in your
application, it must give you at least 30 days’ notice
before it can rescind your coverage. This allows you to
appeal the decision or find new coverage without a
lapse.
You can appeal a rescission of coverage by contacting
the DMHC Help Center at 1-888-466-2219 or
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov.
This provision applies to “plan years” or “policy years”
that began on or after Sept. 23, 2010. A plan or policy
year refers to a 12-month period of benefits coverage
– which may not be the same as the calendar year.
Check with your plan to find out when your plan or
policy year begins.
The Affordable Care Act: Ensuring Your Right to Appeal Health Plan Decisions FACT SHEET
: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provides you and your family with new protections,
programs and resources. Under federal and California law, health plans must have an internal review
process through which you can appeal a health plan’s decision. If you are not satisfied with the outcome
of the internal appeal, then you can get an external review by an independent reviewer who is not part
of your health plan.
Before the law, some health plans in California were
not required to allow consumers to appeal health
plan decisions to an independent reviewer.
If certain health plans denied a treatment you needed
or refused to pay for a service you received, there
was no standard process for an internal or external
review of that denial. You had to accept the health
plan’s decision.
Now, most health plans that are not “grandfathered”
will be required to follow new rules regarding
appeals.
These rules allow you to have a health plan’s denial of
care or treatment reviewed by the health plan within
30 days (or within three days if your issue is urgent).
This is called an “internal review.”
Your health plan must inform you in writing of your
right to appeal when it denies a service or treatment.
If you are not satisfied with the health plan’s internal
review decision, you have a right to have the denial
reviewed by an independent physician who is not a
part of your health plan. This is called an “external
review.”
The health plan must follow the independent external
review decision.
Both the internal and external reviews are free
to you.
The new law does not make any changes to the
Medicare or Medi-Cal appeals processes.
For consumers in self-insured Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) group health plans, this
protection starts with plan years that began on or
after July 1, 2011.
For most other Californians in individual or employer-
sponsored health plans, this protection has been in
place for many years through California’s
Independent Medical Review (IMR) laws.
The Affordable Care Act: Grievance/Appeal Form FORM GA1
For More Information: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
1 Member information (Member complete this information)
Last name
First name
Middle initial
Member identification number
Street address
City
State
Zip Code
Daytime telephone number ( )Evening telephone number ( )Name of person filing grievance/appeal (If other than member)
Last name
First name
Middle initial
3 Grievance/Appeal information
Please describe the specific details of the problem you are having with your health plan, medical group or provider. (Use a separate sheet if needed and attach copies of supporting documents if available)
4 Resolution
Please specifically describe how you would like your grievance resolved.
Expedited appeal
If this situation is a serious or imminent threat to your health and you want an expedited appeal, check here.
(You may call your health plan and request an expedited appeal over the phone)
5 Medical ReleaseI am asking my health plan to review my grievance. I allow my providers, past and present to release my medical records to my plan. These records may include medical, mental health, substance abuse, HIV, diagnostic imaging reports, and other records related to my grievance. These records may also include non-medical records and any other information related to my grievance. I allow my plan to review these records and information. My permission will end one year from the date below, except as allowed by law.
Patient or Parent signature
Date
2 Patient information (Complete only if patient is NOT the member)
Last name
First name
Middle initial
Member identification number
Street address
City
State
Zip Code
Daytime telephone number ( )Evening telephone number ( )Name of person filing grievance/appeal (If other than member)
Last name
First name
Middle initial
You may use this form to file a complaint or appeal with a
health plan.
Don’t wait long to file! Most plans require you to submit your
complaint within 180 days of the denial of service.
Attach copies of documents related to the complaint, such as
denial letters from the health plan or medical group, bills for
health care services you think should be paid by the health plan,
explanations of benefits describing how a claim was paid or
denied by the health plan, and any medical records from
non-contracted providers. Do not send original documents or
letters.
Mail or fax this form and any supporting documents to the
health plan’s Grievance and Appeals department. You may be
able to file a complaint on-line through your health plan’s web
site.
You may call the health plan if you want to file an expedited
appeal. You have a right to an expedited appeal if the health
plan denial poses a serious or imminent threat to your health.
In most circumstances, your appeal will be reviewed by your
health plan within 30 days, or within 3 days if it is an expedited
appeal.
Your health plan will inform you in writing of the outcome of
your appeal.
If you are not satisfied with the outcome of your appeal with
your health plan, you may request an external review. The letter
your health plan sends you about the outcome of your appeal
will have information on where and how to request an external
review.
Call California’s Consumer Assistance Program at
888-466-2219 for more information on your external appeal
rights.
Instructions
You can find your health plan’s contact information on your
health plan membership card or by calling the member services
phone number listed on your membership card.
Clearly describe the problem you are having with the health
plan, include dates, who you talked to and what they told you. It
is important to describe the facts about your problem. If you
have been denied medical care, describe why you need the care.
You can ask your doctor to send a letter to the plan describing
why you need the care.
Remain professional in your tone and state how you would like
your appeal resolved.
If you are requesting an expedited appeal, make sure to
describe why this is an urgent situation. Describe why waiting
longer to receive the service or care could impact your health.
Include new information. If you have information that your
health plan has not previously reviewed, such as results of lab
tests or referrals from a doctor for a treatment or service, make
sure to include this information in your appeal.
Tips for filing an appeal with your plan
The Affordable Care Act: Grievance/Appeal Form Notes FORM GA1
For More Information: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
The Affordable Care Act: “Grandfathered” Health Plans FACT SHEET
: For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov .
The Affordable Care Act exempts most plans that existed on March 23, 2010 – the day the law was enacted – from some of the law’s consumer protections. These plans are called “grandfathered” health plans.
If you have health coverage through a plan that
existed on March 23, 2010, your plan may be
considered a grandfathered plan.
This is true whether you are covered by an individual
health insurance policy that you had on that date or a
job-based health plan that your employer established
before March 23, 2010.
A grandfathered health plan isn’t required to comply
with some of the consumer protections of the
Affordable Care Act.
Grandfathered plans can lose this status if certain
significant changes are made that reduce benefits or
increase costs to consumers.
If your plan loses its grandfathered status, all of the
Affordable Care Act consumer protections will apply
to you when your plan begins a new “plan year” or
“policy year.”
To find out if your health plan is a grandfathered plan:
Check your plan’s materials. Beginning with the
first plan or policy year starting on or after Sept.
23, 2010, health plans must disclose their
grandfathered status in any plan materials
describing the plan’s benefits that are distributed
to beneficiaries or primary subscribers. These
materials must also contain contact information
for questions and complaints.
Check with your employer or your health plan’s
benefits administrator. If you are in a group
health plan, the date you joined may not reflect
the date the plan was created. New employees
and new family members may be added to a
grandfathered group plan after March 23, 2010.
Prohibition of rescissions
Extension of dependent coverage (exception until
Jan. 1, 2014 if dependent is eligible for own
group coverage)
Prohibition of lifetime dollar limits
Restriction of annual dollar limits and no pre-
existing condition exclusions for children under
19 apply to grandfathered group plans only
Coverage for recommended preventive services
at no cost
Elimination of pre-existing condition exclusion for
children under 19 in individual plans
Protection of choice of health care providers and
access to emergency care
New internal and external appeals regulations
Rate review does not apply to
grandfathered plans
If you experience significant changes in the benefits
you receive or the costs you pay and you have a
grandfathered employer-based group health plan,
contact The U.S. Department of Labor for more
information at 1-866-444-3273 or visit
www.dol.gov/ebsa/healthreform.
The Affordable Care Act: No Limits on Your Health Benefits FACT SHEET
For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provides you and your family with new protections,
programs and resources. This law eliminates lifetime dollar limits or annual dollar limits on the essential
health care benefits you can receive under your plan.
Essential health care benefits include, but are not
limited to, doctor office visits, hospital care and
prescriptions.
Before the Affordable Care Act, many health plans
could limit how much they would spend to cover your
essential health benefits each year (“annual dollar
limit”). Many health plans could also set a “lifetime
dollar limit” on how much they would spend to cover
your health benefits for the entire time you were
enrolled in their plan. Anyone who had health care
costs higher than these limits had to pay the amount
that was over the limit.
The Affordable Care Act prohibits health plans from
putting a lifetime dollar limit on your coverage. A
health plan cannot limit the total it will spend to
cover your benefits during the entire time you are
enrolled in the plan. The new law applies to all
employer-based group health plans (“group
coverage”) and all individual insurance coverage you
purchased for you and your family.
The Affordable Care Act limits then phases out annual
dollar limits a health plan places on most of your
benefits (see below). Annual limits will be eliminated
entirely in 2014.
This law applies to all group coverage and individual
coverage purchased after Sept. 23, 2010. However,
this new law does not apply to individual coverage
purchased on or before March 23, 2010, known as
“grandfathered” individual coverage. Your health plan
must state in its plan materials if it is a grandfathered
plan.
The new law does not require your plan or policy to
eliminate annual or lifetime dollar limits on spending
for non-essential health benefits. Federal regulations
will define essential and non-essential health benefits.
Protections under the new law are effective as soon
as you begin a new “plan year” or “policy year” on or
after Sept. 23, 2010. A plan or policy year refers to a
12-month period of benefits coverage which may not
be the same as the calendar year. Check with your
plan to find out when your plan or policy year begins.
The new law phases out annual dollar limits for all
plans except individual health insurance coverage
purchased on or before March 23, 2010.
For health plan contracts and policies purchased on or
before March 23, 2010, your health plan cannot have
annual dollar limits on most benefits lower than:
$750,000—for a plan year or policy year
starting on or after September 23, 2010, but
before Sept. 23, 2011.
$1.25 million—for a plan year or policy year
starting on or after September 23, 2011, but
before Sept. 23, 2012.
$2 million—for plan years or policy years
starting on or after Sept. 23, 2012, but before
Jan. 1, 2014.
No annual dollar limits will be allowed on essential
health care benefits in a plan year or policy year that
begins on or after Jan. 1, 2014.
The Affordable Care Act: Getting the Most Out of Your Health Care Dollar FACT SHEET
For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provides you and your family with new protections, programs and resources. The Act requires that most of your health care premium – or the amount you pay to a health plan to purchase coverage – is spent on providing care and quality improvement, not administrative costs. It also requires health plans and insurers to justify health care premium increases.
To make sure insurance premium dollars are spent
primarily on health care and improve the quality of
the care received, the new law limits how much of
your premium dollar health plans and insurers can
spend on administrative costs, marketing and other
non-health care-related costs. These percentage
limits are also known as “Medical Loss Ratios” or
MLR. If your health plan or insurance company spends
more on administrative costs than the law allows, it
must provide you or your employer a rebate, starting
in 2012.
Generally, the law requires health plans and insurers
to spend at least 80 percent of premium dollars on
direct medical care and efforts to improve the quality
of care provided. This applies to health insurance
coverage purchased by small employers and
individual coverage purchased by you for you and
your family.
If you work for a large employer, the health plan must
spend at least 85 percent of premium dollars on
medical care and improvements on the quality of
care.
If you work for an employer that is self-insured, your
plan is not required to follow this premium dollar
requirement and is not required to provide rebates.
Since Jan. 1, 2011, all health plans are required to
post their rates on the Department of Managed
Health Care’s (DMHC) Rate Review website at
http://wpso.dmhc.ca.gov/RateReview. Rate increases
of 10 percent or more will also be posted to the federal
government’s national consumer website at
HealthCare.gov. These sites can help you compare
pricing.
The law also requires your health plan or insurer to
justify unreasonable premium increases to the DMHC
and Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
If this protection applies to your plan, it will take
effect when you start a new “plan year” or “policy
year” on or after Jan. 1, 2011. A plan or policy year
refers to a 12-month period of benefits coverage –
which may not be the same as the calendar year.
Check with your plan to find out when your plan or
policy year begins.
The rebate program began on Jan. 1, 2011. Any
rebates must be paid beginning in 2012. More details
on the rebate program will be available on the DMHC
website in the near future.
The Affordable Care Act: Resources for You RESOURCE LIST
For assistance, call the Help Center at 1-888-466-2219, email us at
helpline@dmhc.ca.gov or log onto healthhelp.ca.gov.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provides you and your family more freedom and control
over health care choices. This resource list provides contact information for organizations dedicated to
helping you better understand and navigate your health care coverage.
California Department of Managed Health Care
The California Department of Managed Health Care
(DMHC) is the state agency that oversees health plans
and protects the rights of health plan members.
1-888-466-2219
www.HealthHelp.ca.gov
California Department of Insurance (CDI)
CDI regulates, investigates and audits insurance
businesses in the State of California. In most cases
PPO, EPO, POS, indemnity and association plans are
regulated by the CDI.
CDI Consumer Hot Line: 1-800-927-4357
www.insurance.ca.gov
Health Consumer Alliance (HCA)
HCA provides one-on-one assistance to low-income
consumers in many counties. HCA offers services in
multiple languages.
www.HealthConsumer.org
Health Insurance Counseling and Advocacy Program
(HICAP)
HICAP provides counseling and advocacy for people
who have or will soon have Medicare.
1-800-434-0222
www.cahealthadvocates.org/HICAP
Medi-Cal Managed Care Ombudsman
The Medi-Cal Managed Care Office of the
Ombudsman helps ensure people on Medi-Cal receive
all medically necessary covered services through their
health plans.
1-888-452-8609 (many languages)
California Health Benefit Exchange
Starting in 2014, the Exchange will help individuals
and small businesses buy affordable health coverage.
www.HealthExchange.ca.gov
Healthcare.gov
Provides information about the Affordable Care Act,
insurance options, prevention and wellness.
www.HealthCare.gov
U.S. Department of Labor COBRA
Provides information on the Federal COBRA program
to help you keep group health insurance if you lose
your job or your hours are cut.
1-866-444-3272
www.dol.gov/dol/topic/health-plans/cobra.htm
U.S. Department of Labor HIPAA
Provides information on your Federal HIPAA rights to
buy or keep health insurance.
1-866-444-3272
www.dol.gov/dol/topic/health-plans/portability.htm
Health Services Advisory Group (HSAG)
HSAG assists Medicare members with certain
problems and appeals.
1-800-841-1602
www.hsag.com
Office of the Patient Advocate (OPA)
The OPA educates health care consumers on their
rights and responsibilities and promotes transparency
and quality health care by publishing an annual
Health Care Quality Report Card.
1-800-466-8900
www.opa.ca.gov
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